This action allows caching dependencies and build outputs to improve workflow execution time.
See "Caching dependencies to speed up workflows".
- Added support for caching from GHES 3.5.
- Fixed download issue for files > 2GB during restore.
- Updated the minimum runner version support from node 12 -> node 16.
- Fixed avoiding empty cache save when no files are available for caching.
- Fixed tar creation error while trying to create tar with path as
~/
home folder onubuntu-latest
. - Fixed zstd failing on amazon linux 2.0 runners.
- Fixed cache not working with github workspace directory or current directory.
- Fixed the download stuck problem by introducing a timeout of 1 hour for cache downloads.
- Fix zstd not working for windows on gnu tar in issues.
- Allowing users to provide a custom timeout as input for aborting download of a cache segment using an environment variable
SEGMENT_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT_MINS
. Default is 60 minutes.
Refer here for previous versions
Create a workflow .yml
file in your repositories .github/workflows
directory. An example workflow is available below. For more information, reference the GitHub Help Documentation for Creating a workflow file.
If you are using this inside a container, a POSIX-compliant tar
needs to be included and accessible in the execution path.
path
- A list of files, directories, and wildcard patterns to cache and restore. See@actions/glob
for supported patterns.key
- An explicit key for restoring and saving the cacherestore-keys
- An ordered list of prefix-matched keys to use for restoring stale cache if no cache hit occurred for key.
SEGMENT_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT_MINS
- Segment download timeout (in minutes, default60
) to abort download of the segment if not completed in the defined number of minutes. Read more
cache-hit
- A boolean value to indicate an exact match was found for the key.
Note:
cache-hit
will be set totrue
only when cache hit occurs for the exactkey
match. For a partial key match viarestore-keys
or a cache miss, it will be set tofalse
.
See Skipping steps based on cache-hit for info on using this output
The cache is scoped to the key and branch. The default branch cache is available to other branches.
See Matching a cache key for more info.
name: Caching Primes
on: push
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: ${{ runner.os }}-primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: /generate-primes.sh -d prime-numbers
- name: Use Prime Numbers
run: /primes.sh -d prime-numbers
Note: You must use the
cache
action in your workflow before you need to use the files that might be restored from the cache. If the providedkey
matches an existing cache, a new cache is not created and if the providedkey
doesn't match an existing cache, a new cache is automatically created provided the job completes successfully.
Every programming language and framework has its own way of caching.
See Examples for a list of actions/cache
implementations for use with:
- C# - NuGet
- Clojure - Lein Deps
- D - DUB
- Deno
- Elixir - Mix
- Go - Modules
- Haskell - Cabal
- Haskell - Stack
- Java - Gradle
- Java - Maven
- Node - npm
- Node - Lerna
- Node - Yarn
- OCaml/Reason - esy
- PHP - Composer
- Python - pip
- Python - pipenv
- R - renv
- Ruby - Bundler
- Rust - Cargo
- Scala - SBT
- Swift, Objective-C - Carthage
- Swift, Objective-C - CocoaPods
- Swift - Swift Package Manager
A cache key can include any of the contexts, functions, literals, and operators supported by GitHub Actions.
For example, using the hashFiles
function allows you to create a new cache when dependencies change.
- uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: |
path/to/dependencies
some/other/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
Additionally, you can use arbitrary command output in a cache key, such as a date or software version:
# http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/date.1.html
- name: Get Date
id: get-date
run: |
echo "::set-output name=date::$(/bin/date -u "+%Y%m%d")"
shell: bash
- uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: path/to/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ steps.get-date.outputs.date }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
See Using contexts to create cache keys
A repository can have up to 10GB of caches. Once the 10GB limit is reached, older caches will be evicted based on when the cache was last accessed. Caches that are not accessed within the last week will also be evicted.
Using the cache-hit
output, subsequent steps (such as install or build) can be skipped when a cache hit occurs on the key. It is recommended to install the missing/updated dependencies in case of a partial key match when the key is dependent on the hash
of the package file.
Example:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: actions/cache@v3
id: cache
with:
path: path/to/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
- name: Install Dependencies
if: steps.cache.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: /install.sh
Note: The
id
defined inactions/cache
must match theid
in theif
statement (i.e.steps.[ID].outputs.cache-hit
)
Cache version is unique for a combination of compression tool used for compression of cache (Gzip, Zstd, etc based on runner OS) and the path of directories being cached. If two caches have different versions, they are identified as unique cache entries. This also means that a cache created on windows-latest
runner can't be restored on ubuntu-latest
as cache Version
s are different.
Example: Below example will create 3 unique caches with same keys. Ubuntu and windows runners will use different compression technique and hence create two different caches. And build-linux
will create two different caches as the paths
are different.
jobs:
build-linux:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes.sh -d prime-numbers
- name: Cache Numbers
id: cache-numbers
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Numbers
if: steps.cache-numbers.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes.sh -d numbers
build-windows:
runs-on: windows-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes -d prime-numbers
Following are some of the known practices/workarounds which community has used to fulfill specific requirements. You may choose to use them if suits your use case. Note these are not necessarily the only or the recommended solution.
- Cache segment restore timeout
- Update a cache
- Use cache across feature branches
- Improving cache restore performance on Windows/Using cross-os caching
Please note that Windows environment variables (like %LocalAppData%
) will NOT be expanded by this action. Instead, prefer using ~
in your paths which will expand to HOME directory. For example, instead of %LocalAppData%
, use ~\AppData\Local
. For a list of supported default environment variables, see this page.
We would love for you to contribute to actions/cache
, pull requests are welcome! Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.
The scripts and documentation in this project are released under the MIT License